subscribe
to pledge, as by signing an agreement, to give or pay (a sum of money) as a contribution, gift, or investment: He subscribed $6,000 for the new church.
to give or pay in fulfillment of such a pledge.
to append one's signature or mark to (a document), as in approval or attestation of its contents.
to attest by or as by signing.
to append, as one's signature, at the bottom of a document or the like; sign.
to agree or assent to.
to pledge, as by signing an agreement, to give or pay money as a contribution, gift, or investment.
to give or pay money in fulfillment of such a pledge.
to obtain or have a subscription to a publication, concert series, service, etc.: She subscribes to two food magazines.
to give one's consent; sanction: I will not subscribe to popular fallacies.
to sign one's name to a document.
to give approval to the contents of a document by signing one's name.
Origin of subscribe
1Other words from subscribe
- sub·scrib·a·ble, adjective
- sub·scrib·er·ship, noun
- non·sub·scrib·ing, adjective
- pre·sub·scribe, verb, pre·sub·scribed, pre·sub·scrib·ing.
- re·sub·scribe, verb, re·sub·scribed, re·sub·scrib·ing.
- un·sub·scribed, adjective
- un·sub·scrib·ing, adjective
Words that may be confused with subscribe
Words Nearby subscribe
Dictionary.com Unabridged Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2024
How to use subscribe in a sentence
Separately, the game streaming service will be able to offer a “catalog app” where customers are able to subscribe to the service itself.
Apple revises App Store rules to permit game streaming apps, clarify in-app purchases and more | Sarah Perez | September 11, 2020 | TechCrunchYou can also subscribe to my YouTube channel by clicking here.
Video: Part 2 with Kevin Lee on nofollows, 302 redirects, branded content | Barry Schwartz | September 8, 2020 | Search Engine LandThey appear on the voting information page, but they wouldn’t show up in a user’s news feed unless they had previously subscribed to updates from the election administrators’ Facebook page.
Facebook’s Political Ad Ban Also Threatens Ability to Spread Accurate Information on How to Vote | by Jeremy B. Merrill for ProPublica | September 4, 2020 | ProPublicaOnly Disney will really know how well its experiment in paid “premium access” to a movie, available only to people who already subscribe to its streaming service, will be.
Since then, it’s succeeded in multiplying the lenders and servicers who subscribe by connecting them electronically to the MERS network.
First he took energy trading and the NYSE electronic. Now Jeff Sprecher of ICE shares his plans to digitize your mortgage | Shawn Tully | September 2, 2020 | Fortune
Many, many people who subscribe and listen to The Opie and Anthony channel subscribe JUST to listen to Opie and Anthony.
"I don't generally subscribe to conspiracy theories," the Wild Bunch producer told France's Journal du Dimanche.
French Political Sex Movie About DSK Sets Cannes Aquiver | Tracy McNicoll | May 17, 2014 | THE DAILY BEASTPlus, people who become comedians tend not to subscribe to the traditional ideas of career, work or even bathing habits.
Amazon subscribe & Save lets you “subscribe” to most of the non-perishable items that Amazon has in stock.
3 Easy Ways To Make Fresh, Healthy Food A Regular Part Of Your Life | Ari Meisel | December 11, 2013 | THE DAILY BEASTSo you can subscribe to it and get some of those things that I picked that everybody in the world really does need.
Bill Nye on ‘Dancing With the Stars,’ Fabulous Things & Being Popular | Kevin Fallon | October 7, 2013 | THE DAILY BEASTDoubtless they do subscribe in some cases; the practical difficulties will be shown in another connection.
Putnam's Handy Law Book for the Layman | Albert Sidney BollesSometimes fictitious subscriptions are made to induce others to subscribe for stock.
Putnam's Handy Law Book for the Layman | Albert Sidney BollesBut we can hire the old hall, and all the men will be glad to subscribe—a few of us can make up the deficit.
Ancestors | Gertrude AthertonTaken prisoner by the Americans in December, 1899, he was imprisoned on his refusal to subscribe to the oath of allegiance.
The Philippine Islands | John ForemanOne thing we do know, that he left the Colonization Society, because he could not conscientiously subscribe to its measures.
British Dictionary definitions for subscribe
/ (səbˈskraɪb) /
(usually foll by to) to pay or promise to pay (a sum of money) as a contribution (to a fund or charity, for a magazine, etc), esp at regular intervals
to inscribe or sign (one's name, etc) at the end of a contract, will, or other document
(intr foll by to) to give support or approval: to subscribe to the theory of transubstantiation
Origin of subscribe
1Derived forms of subscribe
- subscriber, noun
Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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